10
1. can [Are you able to finish on time?] 2. capable, can do something well [She is an able student.] not here, not present [absent from school] (prep: from) 1. frightened, scared 2. worried (1 and 2 are used only after a verb [I was afraid...]) 3. (idm) I'm afraid (that)... used to introduce something your listener might not want to hear (prep: of, for)

11
1. living [ I was glad to be alive.] 2. active, full of life [The market was alive with people selling clothes, shoes, fruit and vegetables.]) (prep: with) with no one else [We were alone.] (prep: with, in + place, for + period) unhappy, full of anger [I was angry with my brother about what he had done.] (prep: about sth, at sb or sth, with sb) embarrassment about something one has done [I was ashamed of myself. / I’m ashamed that I did that.] (prep: at, of with) (conj: that)

12
sleeping, not awake [Is she asleep?] (prep: at, in, on) 1. beautiful, lovely, pleasing [an attractive painting / I find it attractive.] 2. interesting (prep: to sb) [That’s attractive to me. / I find that attractive.] 1. things that can be bought or had [The book is now available.] 2. person that is free to do something or to be visited [Are you available now?] (prep: for, from, to)

14
All of the ‘A’ adjectives can be used before a noun except afraid, alive, alone, ashamed, asleep and aware. All of the ‘A’ adjectives can be used after a linking verb [That is / looks / smells / tastes / feels / seems awful.] Adjectives that can go after an object: able [I found him quite able to do the job.] absent [We reported him absent.] afraid [It made her afraid.] alive [We found him alive.] alone [Leave her alone.] angry [I wouldn't make her angry if i were you.] asleep [I found him asleep with his face in a book.] attractive [Do you find her attractive?] available [You will always find me available to answer questions.] average [It has pros and cons; I'd call it average.] aware [Her mother's look made her quite aware of her mistake.] awful [I found it awful.]

15
no good (usually before a noun) [What a bad day! / it is bad for sb/sth / it is bad to do sth / feel bad about sth] (badly adv; badness n) 1.main, starting point [The basic problem is that we don't have enough time. / Honesty is basic to a good relationship] (prep: to) 2. limited [My Japanese vocabulary is pretty basic.] (basis n; basically adv) attractive, good-looking, lovely (beauty n; beautifully adv)

19
All of these ‘B’ adjectives can be used before a noun. All of these ‘B’ adjectives can be used after a linking verb [That is / looks / smells / tastes / feels / seems bad.] Adjectives that can go after an object: basic [I found it too basic.] beautiful [I found it beautiful] big [Will the little company make it big?] black [Paint it black.] blind [It can make you blind.] blue [Make it blue.] brief [Make it brief.] bright [Do you find it bright enough?] broad [Why didn't they make the pavement broader?] brown [Colour it brown.] busy [Did you find it busy?]

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All of these ‘C’ adjectives can be used before a noun. All of these adjectives can be used after a linking verb [It is / looks / smells / tastes / feels / seems cool.] Adjectives that can go after an object: calm [This can help keep you calm.] careful [Age can make you careful.] careless [It tends to make you careless.] cheap [Highways make it cheap to transport food.] cheerful [How can we make him more cheerful.] clean [Keep it clean.] clear [Keep it clear.] clever [I find her quite clever.] cloudy [I found the water very cloudy.] cold [Do you find it cold?] comfortable [Make your visitors comfortable.] common [I find this sort of behavior common on these days.] complete [Make it complete.] complicated [Don't make it so complicated.] constant [Keep the heat constant.] convenient [I find this service convenient.] cool [They keep it pretty cool in here, don't they?] correct [I want you to change this sentence to make it correct.] crazy [She called the idea crazy.] cruel [I find that cruel.] curious [I find it curious that Sandy was there.]

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not clean [You can go out and play but don't get dirty.] (dirt n) 1. two times as much/many [double strength] 2. two of one thing [double lines, double negative] (double n, vb; doubly adv) 1. not wet or humid [dry clothes] 2. little or no rainfall [dry season] (dryness n; dryly adv)

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All of these ‘D’ adjectives can be used before a noun. All of these ‘D’ adjectives can be used after a linking verb, except dear.] Only dear and definite cannot be used as an object complement. The following ‘D’ adjectives can go after an object ('to be' is optional): dangerous [I find them (to be) dangerous] dark [I found the street (to be) dark and dreary.] dead [The police found him dead in his home.] deaf [That will make you deaf.] deep [Make the hole deep.] different [What makes this any different?] difficult [I found it (to be) difficult.] direct [I find him too direct.] dirty [Don't get your shoes dirty.] double [I charged them double.] dry [Is the road dry yet?]